Book contents
- African American Literature in Transition, 1865–1880
- African American Literature in Transition
- African American Literature in Transition, 1865–1880
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Preface
- Chronology
- Black Reconstructions: Introduction
- Part I Citizenships, Textualities, and Domesticities
- Chapter 1 Sketching Black Citizenship on Installment after the Fifteenth Amendment
- Chapter 2 Stories of Citizenship: The Rise of Narrative Black Poetry during Reconstruction
- Chapter 3 National Housekeeping: (Re)dressing the Politics of Whiteness in Nineteenth-Century African American Literary History
- Chapter 4 Reconstructing the Rhetoric of AME Ministry
- Part II Persons and Bodies
- Part III Memories, Materialities, and Locations
- Index
Chapter 2 - Stories of Citizenship: The Rise of Narrative Black Poetry during Reconstruction
from Part I - Citizenships, Textualities, and Domesticities
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 March 2021
- African American Literature in Transition, 1865–1880
- African American Literature in Transition
- African American Literature in Transition, 1865–1880
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Preface
- Chronology
- Black Reconstructions: Introduction
- Part I Citizenships, Textualities, and Domesticities
- Chapter 1 Sketching Black Citizenship on Installment after the Fifteenth Amendment
- Chapter 2 Stories of Citizenship: The Rise of Narrative Black Poetry during Reconstruction
- Chapter 3 National Housekeeping: (Re)dressing the Politics of Whiteness in Nineteenth-Century African American Literary History
- Chapter 4 Reconstructing the Rhetoric of AME Ministry
- Part II Persons and Bodies
- Part III Memories, Materialities, and Locations
- Index
Summary
Locating a pedagogical impulse in the Reconstruction texts of Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, James Madison Bell, and Albery Whitman, Stephanie Farrar’s “Stories of Citizenship: The Rise of Narrative Black Poetry during Reconstruction” identifies an emergent form of Black poetry pioneered in Reconstruction that has previously gone essentially unrecognized: long narrative verse that thematizes and analyzes the formation of Black citizenship. In laying claim to a form deeply linked with both national identity and whiteness, the chapter suggests that Black writers seized the cultural power of narrative verse to force a reckoning with the ongoing impact of slavery and the new mechanisms of racial hierarchy that replaced it. It draws attention to the form’s multiscalar cultural work as an analysis of, history of, didactic model for, and even enactment of modes of citizenship for Black Americans, and it illustrates the special role of the AME Christian Recorder in promulgating this poetry as an instrument of Black nationalism, attempting to counter attacks on black social and political life during Reconstruction and to theorize the conditions and components of freedom itself.
Keywords
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- African American Literature in Transition, 1865–1880Black Reconstructions, pp. 49 - 71Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021